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Fifteen years ago, when tall, dark-haired, golden-piped Bernie Tiede was awaiting a murder trial, there seemed to be a constant stream of admiring locals, primarily older widows, supporting him.

The women brought treats to the jail for Tiede, then 38, a former assistant funeral director. They praised him as a sweet, young, churchgoing community volunteer and pleaded with the Panola County prosecutor, Danny Buck Davidson, not to send him to prison.

That stream of doting adorers appears to have dried up.

Tiede was convicted of killing Marjorie Nugent, 81, a wealthy widow. Last week, the courtroom was filled mostly with local news representatives and curious onlookers when Tiede, now 55 with gray hair and wearing wire-rimmed spectacles, walked into the Panola County Courthouse for proceedings that he hopes will lead to an early end to his life sentence.

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“The community has completely turned 180 degrees,” Diane Davidson, the wife of the prosecutor, said. “They want him to serve his time.”

Tiede was convicted in 1999 of fatally shooting Nugent, then storing her body in her freezer for nine months. A defense lawyer filed documents last week seeking Tiede’s release based on new evidence that he was sexually abused as a young man and that Nugent forced him to relive that trauma with her abusive, controlling behavior.

“Like waves of the ocean, beating on the rocks, Tiede’s coping skills were ultimately erased, leading to his inability to suppress these emotions and resulting in his outburst of aggression,” Richard Pesikoff, a clinical professor of psychiatry at the Baylor College of Medicine, wrote in a report filed with the court.

Tiede and Nugent met at Hawthorn Funeral Home, where he was the assistant director. By 1993, Tiede had left his job to work with Nugent full time as her business manager and companion. They shopped together, attended musicals and traveled.

In November 1996, Tiede lost patience with Nugent. Police found her body months later tucked under potpies in the freezer.

In 1999, when Davidson, who declined to comment for this article, was preparing for the trial, there were few places he and his wife could go without hearing support for Tiede, his wife said.

She said that at First United Methodist Church, where Tiede often sang and gave sermons, the pastor prayed, not for the widow’s family or for the prosecutor, but for Tiede to have strength during his time of trouble.

“He was such a pillar of the community,” Diane Davidson said.

Carthage residents did not seem to care much for Nugent. She had a reputation in the East Texas town for being mean, vindictive and uppity.

Richard Linklater, who made Bernie, a 2011 dark comedy film based on the murder, said Tiede was the only person he found in Carthage who said anything nice about Nugent.

“I’m still waiting for that first good word about Marjorie,” Linklater said.

But Tiede had confessed.

At the time of the trial, psychiatrists for the defense and the prosecutor found no reason to believe he had experienced a “sudden passion” that would warrant reducing the charge to second-degree murder. Davidson charged Tiede with first-degree murder and told jurors that his crime was fueled by greed.

They sentenced him to life.

After the release of Linklater’s film, Tiede got new counsel, Austin defense lawyer Jodi Cole. She asked Pesikoff to interview her client and during the visit, Tiede said a relative repeatedly sexually abused him from the time he was 12 until he was 18.

Just as Tiede could not escape from that abusive relationship, Pesikoff wrote, he could not extricate himself from what became an abusive relationship with Nugent.

Tiede has said Nugent forced him to shave her legs while she was undressed and massage her back with a vibrator.

He said she often demeaned and ridiculed him, and became critical and accusatory toward a male gardener with whom Tiede had a clandestine sexual relationship.

Pesikoff concluded that the years of abuse caused Tiede to snap.

Edward Gripon, a psychiatrist Davidson hired to evaluate Tiede before the original trial, interviewed him again last month. He agreed with Pesikoff’s assessment.

Gripon wrote that after years spent repressing the effects of childhood abuse and hiding his homosexuality in a community he worried would not accept him, Tiede learned to compartmentalize his emotions, allowing him to act normally for the months after the murder.

Both doctors agreed that the killing was an act of sudden passion and that Tiede would not be a persistent threat to society.

Now, a court will decide whether, as Tiede’s lawyer argues, jurors would have sentenced him to less than life in prison if they had known about the abuse and its effects. Outside of Carthage, support for Tiede seems to be growing. More than 1,600 people have signed a petition urging Davidson to re-examine the evidence.

But back home, Tiede’s star has faded.

Robert Green knew Tiede before the crime and was on the grand jury that indicted Tiede. He said 17 years behind bars for murder was not enough time.

“I don’t hate Bernie,” he said. “I just think that justice has been served.”

His sentiments echo those of others around town who are talking about what might happen next in the sordid story.

Finishing up their meals at Daddy Sam’s BBQ & Catfish just off the town square, Destiny Guin and her daughter Diana Pittman said the abuse that Tiede said he experienced was no excuse for his crime.

“He’s a coldblooded murderer,” Guin said, shaking her head. Tiede could have walked away, she said, but he did not want to give up the widow’s money.

Ryan Gravatt, a spokesman for Nugent’s family, said her relatives appreciate “those in Carthage who believe in protecting vulnerable elderly women.” No amount of hindsight, he said, can change that Tiede shot their mother and grandmother in the back at close range.

“We believe Tiede deserves to serve his full sentence,” the family said through Gravatt.

These days, Davidson said, her husband can hardly pick up the phone or go to the grocery store without hearing from someone who wants to make sure Tiede stays in prison.

The pressure is just as strong now as it was in 1999. It is tough on their family. But just as he did 15 years ago, Davidson said, her husband will do what the law requires.